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12 - Top 5 Japanese Classroom Phrases - Lesson Notes

The document discusses the top 5 classroom phrases in Japanese. 1. "Please say it/repeat" - Itte kudasai or ripīto shite kudasai 2. "Please look" - Mite kudasai 3. "Please read" - Yonde kudasai 4. "Please write it" - Kaite kudasai 5. "Do you understand?" - Wakarimasu ka? or other variations asking if everything is okay. Teachers use these phrases to check comprehension.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
14 views

12 - Top 5 Japanese Classroom Phrases - Lesson Notes

The document discusses the top 5 classroom phrases in Japanese. 1. "Please say it/repeat" - Itte kudasai or ripīto shite kudasai 2. "Please look" - Mite kudasai 3. "Please read" - Yonde kudasai 4. "Please write it" - Kaite kudasai 5. "Do you understand?" - Wakarimasu ka? or other variations asking if everything is okay. Teachers use these phrases to check comprehension.

Uploaded by

nabucodonosoir
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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All About
Top 5 Classroom Phrases in Japanese

12 Grammar Points 2
JapanesePod101.com
Learn Japanese with FREE Podcasts

Grammar Points
Top 5 Classroom Phrases in Japanese

In this lesson, we'll teach you the top five useful classroom phrases in Japanese, and then
some!

1. "Please say it." / "Please repeat."


Itte kudasai (言っ てください) means "please say it." As a variation, you might also hear
ripīto shite kudasai (リピートしてください), which means "please repeat (after me)," when
teachers want you to repeat exactly what they have said.

2. "Please look."
Mite kudasai (見てください) means "please look," and when an object comes before the
phrase, it means "please look at (object). For example, howaito bōdo, mite kudasai
(ホワイトボード、見てください) means "please look at the whiteboard".

3. "Please read."
Yonde kudasai (読んでください) means "please read."
You can expect to hear this phrase if a teacher wants you to practice reading some word,
2 phrase, or passage. For example, tekisuto, yonde kudasai (テキスト、読んでください)
means "please read your textbook".

4. "Please write it."


Kaite kudasai (書いてください) means "please write it.".
Teachers may use this phrase when they want you to practice writing some hiragana,
katakana, or even kanji!

5. "Do you understand?"


The most direct translation is wakarimasu ka? (分かりますか?).
Other variations Japanese teachers often use include daijōbu desu ka? (大丈夫ですか?)
and ii desu ka? (いいですか?), which both literally translate to "Is it/everything okay?"
Teachers often use these questions to confirm understanding. If teachers want to ask
whether there are any questions, they might also ask shitsumon arimasu ka?
(質問ありますか?), which means "Are there any questions?"

LC: ALL_L12_092109 © www.JapanesePod101.com - All Rights Reserved 2009-09-21

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